That’s the idea behind the latest promotion from BladeOne, an app for private flying that sells seats aboard Gulfstream IV jets. It's an extension of the Blade helicopter-hailing service that took off last year by ferrying travelers to Miami for the annual Art Basel festival; now the company is offering service from New York to Miami and Palm Beach through the rest of winter, every weekend now through April 15, at around $2,250 each way.

The Miami deal includes a round-trip flight on a BladeOne jet and a two-night stay in a suite at the five-star The Setai, Miami Beach in South Beach. A Bentley car service and helicopter transfers are thrown in to the package as well, in case you weren't already pampered enough.

Passengers on BladeOne's flights begin their trip in Manhattan with a quick helicopter ride to Westchester County Airport, where they board a jet that takes them to Opa-Locka Airport, a small airfield in Miami, thus bypassing all the never-ending TSA lines and inexplicable delays of larger airports.

As one of the latest renditions of the sharing economy, BLADE doesn’t actually own its jets: The 12-seater Gulfstreams that BladeOne uses are operated by JFI Jets, and they come equipped with individual iPad Pros at each seat, preloaded with movies and other entertainment. The inflight crew sports uniforms by Tamara Mellon, and in-flight catering is managed by Todd English.

Blade is just one in a parade of new businesses that aspire to be an airborne version of Uber, the popular car service. (Yes, someone already thought of 'Ubair,' but we gather the Uber people didn’t take too kindly to the pun.) But clearly, with this all-in-one, relatively inexpensive deal, Blade wants to stand out from the rest of the pack, and it seems to be working. A spokesperson says that the Miami flights that took off last weekend were completely full.

This article has been updated with new information from BladeOne about the one-way ticket price.